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  1. 1st Grade Reading
  2. Listening for the Sounds in Words

AEIOU
1ST GRADE ELA • READING FOUNDATIONAL SKILLS

Listening for the Sounds in Words

Learn how to hear the first sound, the middle sound, and the last sound in small words!

Section 1

Why Do Sounds in Words Matter?

Words are made of tiny sounds. When you say the word "cat," your mouth makes three sounds: /k/, /a/, and /t/. Each little sound is called a phoneme. For a long time, people have been learning about these sounds to help kids read and write. Let's see how!

Long, Long Ago
People first started writing by making a letter for each sound they heard. That is why we have an alphabet!
About 200 Years Ago
Teachers began teaching reading by saying sounds out loud first, then showing the letters. This is called phonics.
About 50 Years Ago
Scientists learned that kids who can hear each sound in a word become better readers. They called this skill phonemic awareness.
Today
Now first graders like you practice hearing the first, middle, and last sounds in words every day. It's one of the best ways to become a great reader!

So here is the big question: If someone says a word like "dog," can you tell what sound comes first, what sound is in the middle, and what sound comes at the end? That's exactly what we are going to learn!

Section 2

Big Ideas About Sounds

Before we start, let's learn four important ideas. These will help you understand sounds in words.

1

Phoneme

A phoneme is the smallest sound in a word. The word "sun" has three phonemes: /s/, /ŭ/, /n/.
2

Initial Sound

The initial sound is the very first sound you hear in a word. In "map," the initial sound is /m/.
3

Medial Vowel Sound

The medial vowel is the middle sound. It is usually a vowel (a, e, i, o, u). In "map," the medial sound is /ă/.
4

Final Sound

The final sound is the very last sound in the word. In "map," the final sound is /p/.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of a word like a train with three cars. The engine is the first sound, the middle car is the vowel sound, and the caboose is the last sound. When you say a word slowly, you can hear each car of the train!
Section 3

See the Sounds!

Let's look at the word "cat" and see how it breaks into three sounds. Each sound gets its own color.

/k//ă//t/INITIAL(first)MEDIAL(middle)FINAL(last)The word: "cat"
The word "cat" broken into three phonemes shown as train cars: /k/ (initial), /ă/ (medial), /t/ (final).

Look at the picture above. The word "cat" rides on a train with three cars. The first car holds the /k/ sound. The middle car holds the /ă/ vowel sound. The last car holds the /t/ sound. When we put all three cars together — /k/ /ă/ /t/ — we get "cat!"

Section 4

How to Find Each Sound

Here are the steps to find the first, middle, and last sounds in any short word. We call these single-syllable words because they have only one beat when you clap.

The Sound Rule
word = initial + medial vowel + final
Every short word has a beginning sound, a middle vowel sound, and an ending sound.

Step 1 — Say It Slowly

Say the word very slowly, like a robot. Stretch it out. If the word is "pig," say p-i-g. Try to feel your mouth change for each sound.

Step 2 — Find the First Sound

What does your mouth do at the very start? In "pig," your lips pop open to make /p/. That is the initial sound.

Step 3 — Find the Middle Sound

Now listen for the sound in the middle. It is almost always a vowel: a, e, i, o, or u. In "pig," the middle sound is /ĭ/.

Step 4 — Find the Last Sound

What sound do you hear at the very end? In "pig," the last sound is /g/. That is the final sound.

Example
"pig" → /p/ + /ĭ/ + /g/
/p/ is initial · /ĭ/ is medial vowel · /g/ is final
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Imagine you are unzipping a sleeping bag. You start at one end, go through the middle, and finish at the other end. That is how you move through the sounds in a word — start, middle, end!
Section 5

Sound Map — Many Words!

Let's look at lots of words and see their three sounds. The vowel sounds are the ones in the middle. Remember, the five vowels are a, e, i, o, u.

WordInitial SoundMedial VowelFinal Sound
cat/k//ă//t/
dog/d//ŏ//g/
sun/s//ŭ//n/
bed/b//ĕ//d/
fish/f//ĭ//sh/
top/t//ŏ//p/
hug/h//ŭ//g/
net/n//ĕ//t/
THE 5 SHORT VOWEL SOUNDSăas incatmapĕas inbednetĭas inpigfishŏas indogtopŭas insunhugThese vowel sounds sit in the MIDDLE of words!A · E · I · O · U
The five short vowel sounds with example words, arranged in a colorful arc.

Look at the colorful circles above. Each one shows a different short vowel sound. These are the sounds you will most often hear in the middle of short words. When you say a word slowly, listen for which vowel sound is hiding in the middle!

Section 6

Let's Try One Together!

Let's break apart the word "bug" step by step.

Breaking Apart "bug"

Step 1 — Say It Slowly

Say "bug" very slowly: b-u-g. Stretch it out like a rubber band.

Step 2 — Find the Initial Sound

What is the very first sound? Your lips press together and pop open. The first sound is /b/.
/b/ — —

Step 3 — Find the Medial Vowel Sound

What sound is in the middle? Your mouth opens and you hear /ŭ/. That is the short U sound!
/b/ /ŭ/ —

Step 4 — Find the Final Sound

What sound comes at the very end? The back of your tongue pops to make /g/.
/b/ /ŭ/ /g/

All Done!

The word "bug" has three sounds: /b/ (initial), /ŭ/ (medial vowel), and /g/ (final). Great job! 🎉
Section 7

What Makes This Easy or Tricky?

Some words are easy to break apart. Others are a little tricky! Let's see why.

Easy WordsWhy They're EasyTricky WordsWhy They're Tricky
cat, dog, sunEach sound is clear and separateship, chin, thatTwo letters make one sound (sh, ch, th)
bed, pig, hugThe vowel in the middle is easy to hearfrog, stop, clapTwo consonant sounds at the start or end
mop, ten, busShort and simple — 3 sounds, 3 lettersring, bath, duckThe ending has a special sound (ng, th, ck)

The good news is that you can always use the same steps: say the word slowly, find the first sound, find the middle vowel sound, then find the last sound. Even tricky words follow this pattern!

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of it like a sandwich. The bread on top is the first sound, the yummy filling in the middle is the vowel sound, and the bread on the bottom is the last sound. Every sandwich has three parts — and so does every single-syllable word!
Section 8

What Comes Next?

Once you can hear the first, middle, and last sounds in short words, you are ready for even more fun! Here is how this skill grows.

What You Know NowWhat You'll Learn Next
Break "cat" into /k/ /ă/ /t/Change the sounds to make new words! Change /k/ to /b/ and get "bat"
Hear the middle vowel in "dog" (/ŏ/)Learn long vowel sounds like the "o" in "bone"
Find 3 sounds in short wordsFind 4 or 5 sounds in longer words like "stamp" (s-t-a-m-p)
Say sounds out loudMatch each sound to a letter and start spelling!

Hearing sounds in words is like learning to catch a ball. First you catch big, slow balls (easy words). Then you catch fast balls (harder words). Before you know it, you'll be catching everything — reading and spelling like a champ!

Section 9

Practice Time!

Now it's your turn! Try these five problems. Say each word out loud and listen for the sounds. Click "Show Answer" to check your work.

PROBLEM 1 — WHAT DO YOU KNOW?
What is the initial sound (first sound) in the word "man"?
PROBLEM 2 — LISTEN CLOSELY
Say the word "hot" slowly. What are all three sounds? Tell the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds.
PROBLEM 3 — FIND THE MIDDLE
What is the medial vowel sound (middle sound) in the word "hen"? Is it /ă/, /ĕ/, /ĭ/, /ŏ/, or /ŭ/?
PROBLEM 4 — TWO WORDS!
Say the words "cup" and "cap" slowly. These two words sound almost the same! What sound is different between them? Is it the initial, medial, or final sound?
PROBLEM 5 — SOUND SWAP CHALLENGE
The word "sit" has three sounds: /s/ /ĭ/ /t/. If you change the initial sound from /s/ to /h/, what new word do you get? What if you change the final sound from /t/ to /p/ instead?
Summary

What We Learned

Today you learned that every short word is made of tiny sounds called phonemes. A single-syllable word like "dog" has three sounds: the initial sound (the very first sound, /d/), the medial vowel sound (the middle sound, /ŏ/), and the final sound (the last sound, /g/). The middle sound is almost always one of the five short vowels: ă, ĕ, ĭ, ŏ, ŭ.

To find each sound, you say the word slowly and listen carefully. Think of each word as a little train with three cars or a sandwich with three layers. When you can hear each sound on its own, you are ready to start reading and spelling new words. Keep practicing, and you will get better every day! You are a sound super star! ⭐

Varsity Tutors • 1st Grade English Language Arts • Isolate and Pronounce Phonemes in Single-Syllable Words